Publications by authors named "Vilmann H"

Histomorphological and histomorphometrical observations were used to describe the development of masticatory muscles from normal and muscular dystrophic mice. The masseter and the digastric muscle were described from the birth to 35-40 week of age. It has not been possible by histomorphological criteria to separate dystrophic muscles from normal muscles at birth.

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Observations on the ultrastructural appearance of the surfaces of the mature os penis in the rat reveal that a majority of its surfaces may be classified as prolonged resting surfaces on very slow growing surfaces. Although a vast majority of the bone consists of bone tissue types which usually only form a small part of human and laboratory animal bones, their surface appearances resemble to a high degree surface appearances described for ordinary bone tissue types. Thus, surface morphology need not reflect tissue type variance.

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This study examines the distribution of alpha-naphthyl acetate esterase enzymes in reduced enamel epithelium, i.e., post secretory ameloblasts (PSA) and external cells of reduced enamel epithelium (ERE) of continuously growing incisor and molar tooth germs and in the covering oral epithelium (OE).

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The known difference in the severity of dystrophy between the masseter and the digastric muscle of the mouse (dy/dy C57BL/J6) may be attributed to the differences in muscle work load. This possibility was tested by subjecting 3-week-old mice (normal and dystrophic) to a soft diet for 4 weeks. Microscopic examination of haematoxylin-eosin stained sections of these muscles showed that the fibre size dispersion (a measure of disease severity) decreased slightly but significantly in the masseters of mice on a soft diet.

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Roentgencephalometric tracings of skulls of 7-week-old normal and muscular dystrophic mice were compared. A marked size reduction of the dystrophic skulls relative to the normal ones was observed. However, the visceral parts of the dystrophic skull were more reduced in size than the neural parts.

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With the aid of histochemical and electrophoretic techniques activities for esterase and esterprotease were investigated in the digastric and masseter muscles from normal and dystrophic mice. The substrates used were alpha-naphthyl acetate and N-acetyl-L-alanine alpha-naphthyl ester. According to the microscopic observations of the dystrophic muscles the histopathological changes in the masseter muscle were much more pronounced than in the digastric muscle.

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Cross-sections of normal digastric, temporalis and masseter muscles from 7- and 30-week-old mice were studied for centrally positioned nuclei. Such nuclei were inhomogeneously distributed throughout each muscle and varied markedly between specimens. The incidence of centrally positioned nuclei in the digastric muscle (mean +/- SD: 0.

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The esterase profile of fresh human masseter muscle was investigated by use of histochemistry and electrophoresis. The histochemical methods included reactions for alpha-naphthyl esterase, myofibrillar ATPase, reverse myofibrillar ATPase and succinic dehydrogenase. In frozen sections of the muscle the coloured reaction product for esterases was present both as a diffuse sarcoplasmic coloration and as distinct granules.

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Cross-sections of normal and dystrophic digastric and masseter muscles from 7- and 35- to 40-week-old mice were studied in the light microscope. Comparisons of mean cell size, cell size variance and number of centrally positioned nuclei in a given number of fibers were carried out. The masseter muscle seems at both ages to be far more affected by the disease than the digastric muscle.

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Rat cranial skeletal growth was studied, using a cross-sectional data set, for the period 13-49 days by the application of the concepts of continuum mechanics and the numerical techniques of the finite element method (FEM). In contrast to the methods of conventional craniometry (CM) and roentgenographic cephalometry (RCM) the FEM permits fine scale, reference frame invariant descriptions and analysis of growth behavior. This advantage was demonstrated by a numerical example of the use of FEM.

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The present paper considers the significance of interosseous flexions of the palatal complex in the process of orthocephalization of the rat skull between birth and 7 d p.n. The study is based on a sample of 90 rats divided into 4 age groups, i.

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A consecutive series of 43 pyogenic granulomata in the oral cavity is presented. Most were located to the marginal vestibular gingivae and only a minority (12%) of these had a history of trauma whereas 70% in extragingival locations had a previous history of injury. On the basis of an evaluation of oral conditions the aetiology and the pathogenesis of the pyogenic granuloma are discussed.

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The morphogenesis and morphology of the distally positioned cartilage of the os penis, the processus cartilagineus, are described in rats aged from 1 to 100 days. Based on observations of metachromacy of the process stained with toluidine blue it was found that a processus cartilagineus only exists in the period between 35 and 50 days of age. Before 35 days, the structure consists of connective tissue proper, and after 50 days the cartilage starts to calcify partially.

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Cross sections of normal and dystrophic digastric, masseter and temporalis muscles from 7-week-old mice were studied by histomorphological and histomorphometrical methods in the light microscope. The histomorphological part of the study revealed marked differences in morphology between normal and dystrophic muscles. Mutual differences between the dystrophic muscles were also observed.

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The application of the concepts of continuum mechanics and of the numerical techniques of the finite element method permits the development of a new and potentially clinically useful method of describing craniofacial skeletal growth. This new method differs from those associated with customary roentgenographic cephalometry in that its descriptions and analyses are invariant; that is, they are independent of any method of registration and superimposition. Such invariance avoids the principal geometric constraint explicit in all analytical methods associated with conventional roentgenographic cephalometry.

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The present paper considers the significance of interosseous flexions of the palatal complex in the process of orthocephalization of the rat skull between 7 and 60 d after birth. The study is based on a sample of 25 female rats who have been X-rayed at 7, 14, 30, and 60 d with subsequent analysis of the photographs obtained. During this period the constituents of the bony palate, i.

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This study of cranial skeletal growth kinematics details the conceptual principles underlying the development of an allometric network model of such growth. This model is tested by the analysis of longitudinal rat and cross-sectional human growth data and by comparison of this model with a previously described allometric centered model. It is shown that the network model is superior to the centered model in three ways: (1) The allometric network model permits growth prediction when allometric constants are known; (2) the network model has significantly smaller errors than the centered model; and (3) the network model is capable of displaying growth kinematics of both the neural and facial skulls while in time there are marked transformations, such as relative rotations of two sets of cranial anatomic points.

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With the help of in vivo marking with alizarin red S, the patterns of growth of the first cervical vertebra are demonstrated. Major parts of the developmental events which take place during growth (differential bone formation on the bone ends facing the synchondroses, closure of the dorsal synchondrosis at 14 days, closure of the ventral synchondroses at 35 to 40 days) may be explained by the influence that a capsular matrix exerts on its protecting and supporting skeletal unit. A demonstrated continued increase of the dorsoventral diameter of the bone is suggested to be an adjustive growth process related to the translative movements of foramen magnum, a topic that has been poorly understood and incompletely investigated.

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Histomorphological and histochemical aspects of the proximal cartilage of os penis and its surrounding perichondrium in 60 rats aged between 1 and 100 days are described. Comparisons at 11-14 days with the mandibular condylar cartilage reveal a slight difference in their general morphological composition. The developmental changes which take place in the os penis cartilage reveal histomorphologic events, some of which may be brought into agreement with previous observations of patterns of transformations of the bone.

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An allometric centered model of craniofacial growth was tested by several computer-assisted statistical methods on the pure longitudinal growth data of twenty-four close-bred female rats and on cross-sectional human cranial growth data. The study demonstrated that such a model was heuristic and, being incapable of exact definition, was deemed inappropriate for further use in modeling of craniofacial skeletal growth. The necessity for vigorous testing of any hypothesis concerning the modeling of craniofacial growth is stressed.

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In a series of studies of morphology and morphogenesis of os penis in the rat, the present study deals with initial formation and growth of the bone. Os penis in the rat develops at 1 day p.n.

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Histomorphological and histochemical aspects of the mandibular angular cartilage and its surrounding perichondrium are described from a material consisting of 46 rats aged between 1 and 56 days. Comparisons at 11-13 days with mandibular condylar cartilage reveal a marked concordance in their general composition. However, certain differences in extent of the subzones constituting the cartilage are present.

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